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Teton Science Schools finds interim CEO

People, Feb 10

Twenty-eight students from Teton County made the President’s Honor Roll during the 2020 fall semester at the University of Wyoming. To qualify, students must earn a 4.0 GPA and be enrolled in 12 credit hours that use letter grading. Local students on the list are Zachary Ward, of Alta; Kasen C. Arriola, Kyler Marvin Arriola, Paige Asbell, Brian P. Baker, Kyle Matthew Brimeyer, Elizabeth Chambers, Ashley Corona-Tzompa, Clara Daniele Delahaye, Crispin J. Dippel, Samantha Espinoza, Mark Robles Ford, Nicholas Fredricks, Caden Walker Garland, Sarah K. Greger, Gerald E. Henderson, Broderick C. Hills, Don ald Jackson II, Jacob N. Kravetsky, Riley S. Liljestrom, John C. Mercer, Caroline Monroe, Jamison L. Peacock, Hannah L. Rigsby, Parker M. Rowe and

Students learn and thrive in outdoor classrooms: Shelly Saltzman

Students learn and thrive in outdoor classrooms: Shelly Saltzman Updated Dec 27, 2020; Posted Dec 27, 2020 Laurel School third-, fourth- and fifth-grade students are learning in outdoor classrooms this school year in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo Courtesy of Laurel School) Facebook Share 10 years ago with a dedicated Outdoor Leadership teacher and curriculum, was impressed by Laurel School’s pandemic response of immersing students in outdoor education and place-based learning. She wishes that urban schools could adopt a similar approach, especially during the pandemic. Several schools in the Cleveland area and across the nation have made accommodations so that students can learn outdoors during the pandemic. However, none locally has dived in as deeply and thoughtfully as Laurel School, which moved its third, fourth, and fifth grades to its 150-acre Butler Campus in Geauga County for the full school year.

R Park brings back the light

Wilson’s Rendezvous R Park is lighting the way to the new year with its annual winter solstice celebration. But instead of a big gathering (a coronavirus no-no), this year’s observance of Earth beginning to turn its Northern Hemisphere back toward the sun will be a quieter, more introspective affair. For the next two weeks people who visit the park at the intersection of Highway 22 and the Teton Village Road can take a stroll guided by 250 lanterns that have been decorated by valley art students. “We’re so excited for the community to see the final product,” R Park Community Outreach Coordinator Ellie Stratton-Brook said of the lantern display. “It’s nothing like anything we’ve ever done. We wanted to offer something that families and community members can enjoy on their own and outside.”

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